Shank Farm

Shank Farm Easement Adds To Key Preservation Area

Landowner Betty Shank is a landowner that protects her
property through an easement with Tecumseh Land Trust (TLT). Her 99 acre farm
off Rebert Pike adds to an almost contiguous 1200 acres of TLT permanently
preserved farm land. The Shank family bought what is known as the Taylor farm in
2000. Betty recalls the purchase as a sentimental buy for her and her late
husband Raymond, who had his eye on the property for a number of years. Betty had heard about Tecumseh Land Trust over time. Her
friend since grade school, Julia Cady, a TLT volunteer, helped Betty get
involved in preservation of her own land. Originally Betty wasn't sure about
the idea of a conservation easement, but as she got older, she decided that it
was the thing to do.

The actual process of getting the easement funded and
completed took a few years, including gathering the support of Mad River
Township. The township has worked for many years to preserve its rural nature
including instituting a new rural zoning code and, in 2009 began dedicating
$10,000 a year to farmland preservation. Betty says Julia and LTL “made the process very easy and
pushed when I needed to be pushed” to meet the timelines of the Federal Farm
and Ranch Protection Program (FRPP). FRPP which funded the majority of the
easement along with the donation the township gave to TLT. Very few structural or landscaping changes have been made to
this farm since the Shanks purchased it. It is mostly tillable land, with no
farm buildings.

The Shanks’ two sons farm their family properties as well as
other rented acreage. Betty says it is becoming hard and hard to come by enough
rented farm ground to make a living. They purchased this farm to increase the
land security of their farming operation. At this point, Betty says she is leaving the farming
operation, research, decision making, and credit to the next generation: her
grown children Peggy, Michael, and Gary. Betty adds, “An 86 year old widow has no business on the
farm,” but she remains involved in the basics on her homestead – weeding,
trimming, and doing a little gardening of her own.”